Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 13 Jun 1960, p. 16

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16 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, June 13, 1960 CLASSIFIE (Contin ADVERTISING rom Page 15) 50--Articles for Sale 50--Articles for Sale By GLADYS YELLOWLEES BABY carriage, in good condition, $12. RA 5-5116. heir Ton) SOLINA The Church shed birt hg Ahan "RA 5.1258. (was well filled on Sunday after- FOR SALE -- 8piece walnut dining room suite including buffet, 3 varnish- ed wooden interior doors and one lady's spring coat, size 16. Phone MO 8-2180.|3 SINTNG room suite, blonds mish; noon for the Sunday School anni- chesterfield and chair, kitchen suite, Versary services. Baskets of electric range, odd pieces. Phone RA |spring flowers were tastefully 4353. arranged against a background MOVIE camera, 8 millimeter, lights, , $50. Underwood type- , $40 cash. Both like 3. KEEP your basement dry with a de- humidifier from Parkway TV, seven- day free home trial. 918 Simcoe Street North. RA 3-3043. id AWNINGS (canvas). Estimates without| obligation. Write Wm. Cressman, RR 3, Uxbridge. Phone Port Perry, YU 5-7572. FLOOR length wedding gown and head dress, just like mew. Any reasonable offer. RA 8-0475. TENTS, sleeping bags and camping equipment best selection, easy terms Dominion Tire Store, 48 Bond We UNPAINTED furnitureat fabulous ings, big bonus offer, bookcases only 9 cents with the purchase of any piece] of unfinished furniture. Chest of draw- ers $17 desks $14, bookcases $5.99, van- ity dressers $26; record cabinet, $18; room-divider, $22; bookcase headboard, $15. Wilson Furniture, 20 Church Street. NUW-WAY Rug Co. has been | EtG piece dining room suite, reason \iillcon in a well presented re v-|dition, $55. Call RA 3-5183 BALLICRAFYER 37 TV Wesiinghouse of cedars at the platform. A choir washer, gi condition, cheap for quick) 2 ae sale. Call RA 37584 after 4.30 p.m |of 80 voices 'under the leader . or machine|SMP of Mrs. J. Smales of Har- as new./mony sang several selections in Phone {he afternoou Words of welcome] -\were extended to all by Peggy INGLIS il washing with suds miser, $125, good Electrohome humidifier, $10 Ajax, WH 2-0533 TA <ondi-| Citation. The service was conduct- LOYD ba type lawn mower, san,/ed by Reverend Fred Reed. The 464 Nipigon Street. |guest minister the Reverend), BEDROOM suite, kitchen chrome set,(Stacley Snowden, of Millbrook, electric stoye, and defrostomatic re-| spoke particularly to the children] frigerator. RA 8-0241 or apply 13% Seu-li, {ne afterncon basing his re-f gog after 5. py | REFRIGERATOR fof sale, good con. (nak on the building of a good) ife ! FOR a dry basement, rent an Oasis| EVENING SERVICE dehumidifier. These remarkable mi chines will remove gallons of water daily from your basement. Meagher's, Sowden chose as King Street West. __{imyere was a Lad" USED tires, most all sizes, $3 and up, : B. F. Goodrich Stores, RA 5-4543. his imale quartette of Harmony Unit-| distributor for Filter Queen Vacuum. RA 38-4011. PRIVATE sale of household furniture Apply 299 Division Street after 4 p.m. eaner with floor | eeper, six than COMPACT vacuum cleane: polisher and carpet months old, wil; sell sw less half | 51--Swap & Barter USTIN Cambridge A35 in new Son, companis! ior the evening ser- dition, private; or will swap for smal ic , M. Vice delivery truck or station wagon wH | ce was 1 M. Vice. School next 26410 Ajax. | Sunday Sunday price. RA 5-3894 PAINT, interior, exterior, $2.95 gallon. All colors. Guaranteed. Flat, gloss Oshawa Hardware and Electric, 8 Church Street. RA 3-7624. ONE electric Coca Cola cooler, in first class condition, $125. 117 Court Street. | | | 759 SCOOTER for sale, $300 cash. Apply | 222 Annis Street | LADY'S all weather coa summer dresses, blouses etc. good condition, size 16-18; also electric fan. RA 3-4057 B. F. GOODRICH Stores -- ti teries, Kelvinator refrigerato - vision, 'Thrifty Budget Plan. RA 5-4543.| AUDS(N Bay outfit, tweed, coat, hat, size 5 nylon baby suit, dresses, nylon snow suit, other articles, practically new, RA 5-2665 {5 BOAT, 1959, 35 HP Evinrude motor. RA 5.7917 ITH transistor ; also bat dios, wide range < for all makes agher's, 5 King outfits, new, 1959 35 hp Merc. elect motors, 15 ft.| molded plywood boa! = and trailer, com- plete $1099.00 each. One only to a cus- tomer. Terms, Dominion Tire Store, 48 Bond Street West | MOTOROLA push butten car, radio, | Parkway Televi sion. 918 Simcoe Stréet North. RA 3-3043 THREE rooms of furniture only $299.| This includes chesterfield and chair, chrome set, bedroom suite, mattress, spring, step and coffee table, boudoir and table lamps, pillows, etc. $25 down delivers! "Guaranteed Best Value!™| Barons' Home Furnishings, 424 Simcoe Street South Two table lamps and 1 Trilite $59 85| value, for only 5c with the purchase of | any chesterfield over $149. Our 5th) Anniversary Special! Barons' Home| Furnishings, 424 Simcoe Street South.| toe, all 1 | WALLACE Vacuum Service, all makes, parts attachments, brushes, guaran- teed rebuilt machines. Estimates free. Rentals, Vacuum Cleaner Repair Ser-| vice. RA 8-0591- anytime { TENTS, leeping bags and camping equipment, best selection, easy terms. Dominion Tire Store. 48 Bond West. SINGER treadle, Immaculate condi- tion, used only a few months. Would Make offer. RA 5-2591. 5 Legal {morning will |with church service following at 43 11 o'clock Tenders addressed to the New Building Committee, Women's Welfare League, 387 Simcoe St. South, Oshawa, will be re- ceived up to noon, June 21st, 1960, for the construction of a frame, one-storey building approximately 24 by 70 feet in area. The lowest or any tender not necessarily accep- ed. Information may be ob- tained from Harold McNeill, 387 Simcoe St. South, Osh- awa. DURHAM COUNTY DISTRICT HIGH SCHOOL BOARD TENDERS COURTICE MGH SCHOOL Secled tenders will be re- ceived by the Durham County District High School Board, care of the Architects, until 4:00 P.M. E.D.S.T., Wednes- day, July 6th, 1960, for the construction of Courtice High school on part of Lot 29, Concession 2 Darlington Township. Drawings and specifications may be obtained at the of- fice of the Architects, Pent and and Baker, 490 Jarvis St., Toronto, on deposit of $50.00 Mechanical nd trades are due at ronto Bid Depository Bay St, Toronto, by P.M., EDS.T. Tuesday 5th, 1960 Lowest or any tender necessarily accepted, the band concert at BHS when Pat Knox and Pat Davis took |part in the splendid program. Recent cai'ers with Mr. Mrs. J. were Mr. and Mrs. F. Thompson, Hodgson, Mr. ice, Mrs. . Stan Keith Hodgson son, Mrs. N Ellicota Peterbor- {ough Mr | Billie and Donald, and Barbara, were Sunday and Mrs. Harvey| Blackstock, {guests of Mr Yellowlees Mr [Charles Langmaid and family. | Mr Iniskillen; Mr. and Mrs L Preston and chil- dren, Bowmanville, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Langmaid. OTHER NOTES Mr. and Mrs. Percy Dewell and children, Mrs. J. Chapman, Hampton; Mrs. R. J. McKessock, | Oshawa; Misses Linda Mutton, Marilyn Moore, of Bowmanville and Mr. Harvey Webster, Burnt] River, ~were Sunday guests of] Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Tink and family Mr and Mrs A. Hills and Mr. land Mrs. D. Craig and children, | Tyrone, ' were Sunday visitors) with Mr. and Mrs. Wes Hills and family. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Rowan, Bethany; Miss Lena Taylor, Mrs.| |W. Wight anc Miss L. Hoar, Bow- a Electrical the To 1104 4:00 July not pass for new. Must sell this el TRAILER, box and two lawnmowers, also smocked baby nighties, new. Call RA 8-8700. SELLING furniture? We'll buy it. Re- frigerators, TV's, washers, pianos, stoves, etc. For top cash offer, con- tac' 19 Prince Street. Phone RA 38-1131. HIGHEST prices paid for used furni- ture, also sell and exchange. Contact Community Furniture Store, 19 Prince Street. Phone RA 8-113L SEE HOME APPLIANCES OSHAWA LTD, 90 SIMCOE SOUTH FOR FRIGIDAIRE SALES AND SERVICE Domestic and Commercial RA 5-5332 Now is the time to have a beautiful home with aluminum doors and windows, best quality, lowest price in town. Quick service. Alex Vajda RA 3-985] Every job guaranteed. SEE HOME APPLIANCES OSHAWA LTD. 90 SIMCOE SOUTH FOR FRIGIDAIRE SALES AND SERVICE Domestic and Commercial RA 5-5332 All aluminum products -- Doors, windows, shower doors, awnings, TV towers, paving One contract, nothing down For free estimates call -- Aluma Seal Co. y RA 5-9365 ANYTIME "SALE SALE SALE Kitchen Chairs, $5; Tables, sizes and colors at your re- quirement; Coffee Tables, $12.95; Step Tables, $12.95; Telephone Benches, $11.95; Chrome Rocking Chairs, $15; Reclining Chairs, 3-piece Sectional ¥2-Sofa, curved cen- tre; Rugs: 4 x 6, $14; 6 x 9, $24; 9 x 12, $55; Kit- chen Chairs recovered, $3. URE HONEST MAIKE'S ot Unbelievable Prices 184 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH Or Call RA 8-6053 between 7 - 9 p.m. FOOD AND FREEZER PLAN Complete lines of meats and groceries. Savings of up to 30%. Let us prove to you as we hove to thousonds of others how we can save the cost of the freezer with our proven plan. Canadian man- ufoctured freezers, guaran. teed by Good-Housekeeping. Government inspected meats. Well known branded pro- ducts, all part of our plan to eat better for less. Phone RA 5-3709. No obligation Freezers $189 up. Compare before you buy. , lin the spraying campaign. and Mrs. | TENDERS |E%% sagen. "o "0 | FOR WINDOW Fh Poy GE CLEANING land family visited Mr. and Mrs. |Frank Westlake, Sr. | Mr. and Mrs. Frank Westlake Tenders addressed to The [Sr Mr. anc Mrs. Frank West- Chairman of the City Property [lake Jr., Joan Gordon and Shir- Committee, in care of the |l€y; Mr. and Mrs, Percy West- undersigned, for the cleaning |l2ke and family, attended a sur- of the windows of the Civic |Prise party for Mr. and Mrs. N. Administration Building will |Fice (May Westlake) Taunton, be received until 5:00 p.m, |Who on May 29 observed their June 17, 1960 {25th wedding anniversary. | Mr. and Mre. C. Johns, Mr and Mrs. Larry Dewell and Deb- |bie, Bowmanville; Mr. John |Broome and family, Tyrone; Miss Ruth Pzscoe, Peterborough; | {Reverend and Mrs, Stanley Snow- | |den, Beverley and Tommy, Mill- {brock, were Sunday tea guests of (Mr, and Mrs. L. Broome and {sons. | Mr. and Mrs, Jim Wood aud |children, Taunton; Mrs. T. Flett, {Columbus, were Sunday visitors |with Mr. and Mrs. D. Flett and | {family. | | Mr. and Mrs. Hilton Tink, Mr. |and Mrs. Water Tink and Brian, | Ebenezer; Mr. and Mrs. Keith | Shackleton and Barry, Bowman- | ville, were tea guests on Sun- and Mrs. Harry | Interested persons should con- tact the Building Superinten- dent to ascertain the amount of work involved before sub- mitting a tender. Work to be done as directed by the Building Superintendent The lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted. H. E. TRIPP, Treasurer, Civic Administration Building, 50 Centre St., OSHAWA, Ontario. | USE THE OSHAWA TIMES. [ue were CLASSIFIED {Knox and sons | Mrs. E. Spires attended a COLUMNS [shower for Mis: *Ruth Fraser at | the home of Mrs. John Barlow. | Big Old Clocks "= | Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Ellicott, San- 'Popular Agair |dra and Donalay Mrs. N. Yellow- WATERLOO, Ont. (CP) | lees, Bowmavville, visited on Sun- | Grandfather « and grandmother |day at Mr. and Mrs. E. Hocka- |day's | | --clocks are making a comeback. | Mrs. E, Spires attended a trous- | seau tea given by Mrs. G. Gray | for her dauguter, Gail. | Mr. and Mis. J. Dyer and| Carl Hentschel, president of a|Elizabeth, Mr. and Mrs. A. Bee- s, Oshawa; Mr. and| |firm here that makes™the bigivor and son clocks, says some 65 are being | MIS: Glen Giaspell and sons, | | chi : Taunton, were Sunday tea] (shipped to dealers in Edmonton, | guests of Mr and Mrs. Rae Pas- | | Winnipeg, Montrael and Toronto. |coe and children. | He says business has been in- F. Abernethy, | lcreasing yearly and attributes [Mr. and Mrs A. Abernethy and | |the growing demand to the era |childien, Manilla, were Sunday | of affluence and the fact that the|guesis of Mi. and Mrs. Don Tay-| | clocks remain a symbol of pres-|lor and famiy | {tige despite the fact they went| Mr. and Mrs. Sam Dewell, | out of style 25 years ago, with the Hampton, and Mrs. Frank| {trend to bungalows from high-|Bray, Enfield, were Sunday] ceilinged homes. | visitors with Mr. and Mrs. Wal- | | A grandfather clock is ter Parrinder. |inches tall, weighs is Shows 35 Mr apd Mrs. Neil Gifford and |pounds and sells for $800 to Children, Taunton, were Sunday | {$1,000 Grandmother clocks aver. tea guests of Mr. and Mrs. Arnot | |age between 75 and 77 inches,|Wotten and family. | | weigh about 150 pounds and sell| Mrs. and Mrs. Charles Smith, | for $295 to $490 Oshawa, were Sunday visitors) Cabinet - maker William/|%ih Mr. and Mrs. Harold Pas-| Schmidt, 79, who has worked at|®%¢ his craft for 62 years, handles | Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Hardy, | each clock with real fondness, | Bowmanville, were visitors on| "A little bit of me goes in every | Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Isaac | clock," he says Hardy and Stanley. | ng wh | Mrs. I. Hardy. Mrs. Joe Snow wae ys the Sealed yey and Bruce, visited Mrs. T. | Frederick Hahndorf who came Turner and Miss Lily Dobson at fiom Germany, the country that, 0%kwoud., Mrs. C. Werry, Mrs still s 3 " 1 Mrs. C. , Mrs. Si) Supplies the works for the | yy Moffatt. Mrs. N. Metcalf, | Lio 5 Snowden, Mr. Harold ATTAC TI Macklin, Oshawa; Mr. and Mrs, ST ACK SUD WORM [Ross Pearce. Rev. and Mrs. ; oy . --¥F1ve|Stanley Snowden, Millbrook; Mr. | airplanes left here for Frederic-land Mrs. L. Snowden and Betty, | ton to join the attack against the|M: Bert Snowden, Maple Grove; spruce budworm, insect menace Mr. and Mrs. Roy Van Camp to Canadian forests. They will be Mr. and Mrs J R. Metcalf and| among a fleet of about 45 planes Ross, Base Line; Mr. J. A. Weiry, Ennsikillen, were Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Hold Anniversary Sunddy School {guests of the Werry's at Rose-| landvale. David Sma.es, Sharon Lucas and Miss Marjorie Helen Baker and Eiléen Couch, Toronto; Mr, and Mrs. Keith Or- miston and children, Mrs, E. Or- miston, Ebenezer; Mr. Laughlin, Nestleton, were Sunday|tor of human history at the Na- tea guests of Mr. and Mrs. Tom|tiona! Museum in Ottawa, he is Baker and family. M:. and Mrs. Gordon Pascoe, Galt. M:. y Mr. and Mrs Harold Jebson and Dorothy, Beaverton, ! {day tea guests of Mr. and Mrs./ALWAYS A CHIEF i [Russell Vice "Among Indians there is al-| Mr, and M children, Kedron; Mr. and Mrs, perienced becomes At the evening service Reverend Tom Pleasance "and Susan, Ty- none of the others makes any de- theme rone, were tes guests on Sunday cision without consulting him. {with Mr. and Mrs. Joe Snowden| | The choir was assisted by thejand Bruce. Mrs. Fred Tamblyn, Mr. and|not true. Indian ed Church whose selections were Mrs. E. Larmer, Mr, greatly enjoye¢. The choir ac- Sein Larmer and Mr. and Mrs be at 10 o'clock Nelles, Mrs. bel " ah guests of Mr Several from Solina attended Cryderman and children and' Mrs. the nurse's graduation dinner and|p I" J | and dance at St {PRESS THE BUTTON Yei'owlees and Gladys|ium. Mr Mr. and Mrs. H. Moses and Jan-|family, Oshawa Mrs. |Terento, L. Thomp- Bowmanville, Yellowlees, of Bow-|guests of Mr. and Mrs. Wes Y manville, and Mr: and Mrs. Ivanjlow} | M:ss Ella Taylor and Sandra, |Scarborough, Mr. and Mrs. Roy|has spent 25 years travelling in and Mrs. Johm Medland,/Knox, Hampton and Miss Betty Brooklin,| Knox, Toronto, were Sunday tea Mrs. Ralph Larmer and children, guests of Mi tea|Millson and daughters. M: daughters and Mrs. George Gilroy Bowinanville; Mr land sons, Columbus, were Sun- Wilbur, Mr, and Mrs. |day tea guests of Mr. and Mrs. Mrs Taunton, were tea guests of Mr. and Mis. Roy McGill, En-|J. Mr. L. Squair, Salem; Sunday. Cable Cuts Worry For Intelligence LONDON number graph cables linking Britain with North America were cut simul-| : q taneously earlier this year, a post/Will experiment with steel wire The total was about seven per office spokesman said Sunday : He was commenting on a re-{road surface that will withstand] This brought sales for the year|on the railroad front after long the new department of rapiay|run. The vessel, with a capaci port in the Sunday Times alleg- heavy traffic. The mesh will be|to 2,660,000 cars, up 12.9 per cent|uncertainty. Railways granted | establish Cu the or ; 4 ing {suspected Russian trawlers fish-|crete. | {manville; Mrs. R. Sherwin 0 sna _ _-- = TT 'French Leam 'Bbout Arctic By Paquereite Villeneuve Canadian Press Correspondent PARIS (CPV:--In a long, narrow {classroom at the Sorbonne, stu- Miss |dents are learning about the Arec- tic from a Canadian--Prof. Jacques Rousseau of St. Lam- bert, Que. i | Co-founder of Montreal's botan- L. Mec-\ica) gardens and a former direc- Oshawa, |working on a two-year associate {professorship at the French uni- versity. His main course of lectures is Mrs. E. McCormick, Columbus, (ehiitled Wa og jie ARTS Ton W. R. Westlake, ~Oshawya; 4d x by ® a |whai he regards as misconcep- {tions about Canadian Indians. speni the weekend with and Mrs. C. Pascoe were Sun- Mr. and Mrs. Foster Snowden, ways a chief, even when there are| Bill Snowden and (only two persons The most ex- chief "They say that Indians make) {thei women work hard. That is| women do mno| andy Mrs.\more work than women any- Douglas, where else in the world." tea guests ofl He recalled that he once took some Indian guides from the Miss Helen{north to Montreal, showed them Mr. andlaround the city and brought Bob Fleti, Janie and Iso-|them to his office and his home. Columbus, were Sunday tea| Asked what impressed him and Mrs. Ross most, one Indian guide replied: | "What strikes me more than Mr. and Mrs. M. Vice and Mr. anything else about this place is Stan Millson attended|that women do all the work." | ackstock, were E. Cryderman. Mrs. F. Nelles, Bowmanville; Gregory's auditor- He had noted that in his office and M:s. V. Osborne and|2ll Prof. Rousseau had to do was Miss Nan Ollin, |t0 Press a button and a secretary Charles Allin, [Would appear to carry out his in- Sunday tea Structionz. And at home, he sat 's Yel./down to a meal his wife alone had prepared. Prof. Rousseau estimates Mr. were and s and sons. he the Canadian north studying the |customs and behavior of the peo-| and Mrs. Howard Pie Who live there. He is internationally known for and Mrs. Bob Williams and | his work in ethnology and botany| Mrs Isobel Reynolds, anu au least 30 arctic plants bear| and Mrs Cari | his name. His published works| N Leach, | Include more than 400 articles] Allan Wilbur and 'children, and he has received honorary de-| | grees from many universities. on| |ing off Newfoundland of trying to| --|tap- the cables. 1 The newspaper, in a report from its special correspondent in| |Gander, Newfoundland, said that| |Canadian intelligence officers| {were worried by "the increasing {number of unexplained breaks' |in cables. | It said that expert advice was {being sought and noted that Rus- sian trawlers had been sighted] near places where the cables (had broken. Kivell and Pearl Leach (Reuters)--A large telephone and tele- f ; 9 TOUGH PAVEMENT HAMILTON (CP) -- Hamilton mesh in an attempt to find a| that Canadian intelligence used as a reinforcement in con-| | demonstration at airfield near | less aircraft is powered by five | The Beetle is said to be equip- and ' beet 'FLYING BEETLE' IN DEMONSTRATION ' The 'Flying Beetle' (SCI), an | hopped to height of 40 feet in | experimental British jet plane, | four seconds during the demon- takes off vertically during | stration. The delta-wing, tail- hausting downward for veatical lift, the fifth at rear of craft | for normal forward propulsion, | Bedford, England.- The Beetle ped with completely autoimatic Rolls Royce engines--four ex- lc stabilizing system through which it can change from for- ward wo hover flight and vice- versa--or push itself in reverse. --AP Wirephoto men a four per cent wage! in. : 4 Markets Respond Radjation Tidzards | A presidential fact finding | 3 board" aerial tact rene ¢| Convention Theme |five cents an hour for @00,000| MONTREAL (CP)--Prominent 0 £ er ews non-operating rail workers, anadians from many fields will But there was labor strife in|gather here Monday and Tues- By JACK LEFLER {143,000 sare this werk, a gain of lie aitcraft and missile Wuius-lday io, Collider Cataian policy rad a 4 | |tries. lin the nuclear age. NEW YORK (AP) -- New en-|12.5 per cent over a year ago.| The International A ion | is the constituent couragement flowed into United|Chevrolet division of General, npaohinists went on strike at|convention of the National Com- States business channels this| Motors built its millionth car of you At1ac missile bases, in¢dud-|mittee for the Control of Radia- week. The rash of good news|the year Thursday, the earliest);;,; cape Canaveral, Fla. Other|tion Hazards, under the pro- OE Ei ris. 7 . . Sout ia's ai .|L. Keenleyside, chairman e The stock market responded| Easier money became more Southern Sallioruia's aera 3 British Columbia Power Commis- with its biggest weekly gain of| widespread when eight addi-lon strike at seven United Air-|Sion and former director-general the year. Such basic issues as|tional Federal Reserve banks cut|craft plants in Connecticut of the United Nations Technical steels, motors and chemicals led|their discount rate to 3% per --|Assistance Administration, the march. cent from four. The banks are in BAR! The committee seeks to draw Steel industry prospects got a New York, Chicago, Cleveland, BER CHAT public attention to radiation dan- boost when chairman Roger|Richmond, St. Louis, Minneapo- CALGARY (CP -- The iCal-|gers arising from both peaceful Blough of U.S. Steel Corporation|lis, Kansas City and Dallas. The|gary public school board was dis-|and military uses of atomic en- predicted that the operating rate Philadelphia and San Francisco cussing the report of the Came fon ergy. would pick up substantially in|banks set off the round of cuts/foval commission on education August. last week. Only Boston and At-|When a councillor asked wihat| FIGHT POLLUTION Steel production rose this week|lanta remain to follow. La of Migs woulda 3 ever be ESSEX, Ont. (CP -- A new to 62.3 per cent of capacity from J DIN: required earn: provid! law in this town near Windsor last week's holiday-curtailed out-|P EY ENCE: SPENDING UP {the answer himself: Zoviied vwiow a $50 fine for anyone put of 60.6 The Senate appropriations com-|tional English, for one thing." convicted of burning garbage of AUTO SALES BOOM mittee acted to add about $1,| er "lang refuse creating ve The automobile industry re-|200.000,000 to defence spending. | GEOGRAPHY EXPERT |odors or smoke. ported sale of 566,650 new Ameri-| 101s would bring a big lift to air-| SASKATOON (CP) -- Dr. J. peas can-made cars in May, the best! ¢r4ft, missile and electronics in-|yowarg Richards, associate piv: FINE FERRY for the month since record 1055 | dustries with benefits spilling fessor of geography at the Royal| CHATHAM, Ont. (CP) A over into the general ecomomy. \filitary College at Kingstom,|$500,000 ferry built at Erieau near Labor peace appeared assured|Ont., has been named head of here has completed her first trial cent above May, 1959, 2 > 11 of agts/of 300 passengers and 13 cars, from the 1959 period. |16,000 members of the Order of and sciences at the University of|will run between Pelee Island Output jumped to an estimated Railroad Conductors and Brake-'Saskatchewan. and the mainland. | Like A Stranger... In "Paradise" Wherever You May Be On Your VACATION RATES The Oshawa Times will be mailed to your cottage or re- sort at the regular carrier rate of 45 PER WEEK! - Have The - Oshawa Ses Mailed To You... Wherever You Are! It will be just like getting a letter from home when THE OGHAWA TIMES arrives every day, bringing you all the news, plus your favorite comics. There is no extra charge for this service . . . Order your vacation subscription now. See your carrier boy, phone the Times, RA 3-3474 or return coupon below to -- CIRCULATION DEPT. THE OSHAWA TIMES . NAME veesces VACATION ADDRESS START DATE STOP DATE cesvoe ceevsosee ui HOME ADDRESS $8 00000000 00000000000000000000C00000 STOP DATE RESTART DATE sesesescvsvssess "vo epeecse '

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